Androgenic-anabolic steroids blunt morphine-induced c-fos expression in the rat striatum: possible role of beta-endorphin |
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Authors: | Harlan R E Brown H E Lynch C S D'Souza D Garcia M M |
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Affiliation: | Department of Structural and Cellular Biology SL-49, Tulane University School of Medicine, 1430 Tulane Avenue, New Orleans, LA, USA. harlanre@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu |
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Abstract: | ![]() Self-administration of large doses of androgenic-anabolic steroids (AAS) in a significant portion of the population suggests that these agents are drugs of abuse. However, acute administration of AAS did not induce striatal immediate-early genes (IEG) expression in male rats, indicating that AAS do not share a common mechanism of action with other drugs of abuse. Surveys have indicated that people who abuse AAS are more likely to self-administer other drugs of abuse than do people who do not take AAS. In the present study, chronic administration of AAS blunted the striatal c-fos response to morphine, indicating that AAS can alter the molecular responses to at least one drug of abuse. Chronic administration of AAS also increased the content of beta-endorphin in the midline thalamus, suggesting a possible mechanism by which AAS may modulate the response to morphine through regulation of thalamo-striatal neurons. |
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